New York Life Ins. v. Brown

99 F.2d 199, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 2836
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedOctober 4, 1938
DocketNo. 4335
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 99 F.2d 199 (New York Life Ins. v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Life Ins. v. Brown, 99 F.2d 199, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 2836 (4th Cir. 1938).

Opinion

PARKER, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment for plaintiff in an action to recover damages for breach of contract with respect to three policies of life insurance issued by the New York Life Ins. Co. upon the life of one Robert N. Brown and payable to his estate. The policies had been assigned to a bank and the assignee had borrowed from the company their full loan value. When interest was not paid on the loans and no further premiums were paid, the company, acting under the provisions of the policies and the loan notes, granted extended term insurance; but insured died after this had expired. Action was instituted by his administratrix as plaintiff, alleging that the loan to the assignee was unauthorized and that the action of the company, in granting extended insurance for so short a period and in denying further liability under the policies, amounted to a breach of the contracts therein embodied. Actual damages in the sum of $17,000, the face of the policies, was demanded, with punitive damages in like amount. The bank to which the policies had been assigned had gone into receivership before action was instituted and all its assets, including the indebtedness due it by insured, had been assigned to one Wheeler, who was made a party defendant to the action but filed no pleading and asserted no rights under the policies. The jury found for plaintiff, awarding actual damages in the sum of $17,000 but no punitive damages. The only question which we need consider arises upon the motion of defendant for directed verdict, which, the court, with the consent of the parties, reserved for decision when submitting the case to the jury. Motion for judgment was made in connection with this motion after verdict was returned; but the motion was denied (D.C., 22 F.Supp. 82), judgment was entered for plaintiff upon the verdict, and defendant has appealed.

The facts bearing upon the motion for directed veidict are as follows: Two policies in the sum of $2,000 and $5,000 respectively were issued by defendant upon the life of Brown in July 1919 and were assigned by him to the bank of Saluda, of Saluda, South Carolina, in March 1922. A policy in the sum of $10,000 was issued by defendant on his life in October 1921 and was assigned by him in November of that year to the Farmers Bank of Saluda, S. C. The two assignee banks were later merged under the name of the Farmers Bank of Saluda. The form of assignment used in each case, and filed with the company under the provisions of the policy, was as follows :

“For value received - being of legal age, hereby assigns and transfer unto The Bank of Saluda, Saluda, South Carolina, the policy of insurance known as No. 6519915 of Robert N. Brown of Saluda, S. C., and alj dividend, benefit and advantage to be had or derived therefrom, subject to the conditions of the said policy ^ and the rules and regulations of the Company and any indebtedness to the New York Life Insurance Company against said policy.”

Following the assignments, all premiums on the policies were paid by the banks and were charged in some instances to the account of insured and in other instances to expense. The insured was indebted to the banks in an amount largely in excess of the face of the policies; and there is evidence to support the contention that the policies were assigned as collateral security to this indebtedness, but no evidence that the 'company had knowledge or no.tice of this fact. On the contrary, the evidence is that, upon a question arising as to whether it was necessary for the insured to sign dividend receipts, the company suggested in a letter that ordinarily policies were held by banks as collateral security, and that, if that were true here, it would be necessary for insured to join in a request for a change of option as to application of divi-. dends, but that, if the policies were not assigned to the bank as collateral security, but represented an absolute purchase so that the title rested absolutely in the assignee, and if the assignee would so certify to the company, the company would then be able to deal with the assignee alone. Answering this letter, the cashier of the merged bank, which held all the policies, wrote a letter certifying that the policies were owned absolutely by the bank; and no reason appears why the company should [201]*201have doubted the statements therein contained.

The pertinent portions of the letter are as follows:

“All three of these policies now belong to and are held by The Farmers Bank of Saluda and under the assignments by the insured referred to above they became and were intended to become by the insured the property absolute of said banks, and under the consolidation are now the property absolute of The Farmers Bank of Saluda.
“We certify that these policies now represent an absolute purchase and that the title of these policies are now vested absolutely in The Farmers Bank of Saluda, the successor to The Bank of Saluda and The Farmers Bank — and that The Farmers Bank of Saluda is paying the premiums on said policies and that the insured now has no interest whatever in said policies or either of them.
“We hope that this plain statement may prove sufficient to satisfy the Home Office of The New York Life Insurance Company as to the title and ownership of these policies, and we ask that the Company now deal with us alone in regard to these policies in every respect and in every particular.”

In 1931 the bank applied for and obtained from the company loans to the full extent of the loan value of the policies, receiving thereby a total of $3,393. This amount was credited by the bank on the indebtedness of insured; but there is no showing that the company had any knowledge that it was so credited. When the next premiums fell due they were not paid, nor was interest paid on the loans. The company, therefore, acting under provisions of the policies and of the loan agreements, proceeded to apply the reserve set up under the policies to the payment of the loans, granting extended term insurance for the balance of the reserve and notifying the bank accordingly. As above stated, this extended term insurance expired before the death of insured.

Under the circumstances set forth, we think that the company was justified in dealing with the bank alone in the making of the loans under the policies, and that the insured was estopped by the absolute assignments executed to the bank from questioning them. His administratrix, of course, stands in his shoes and is bound by the same estoppel. It is true, as held by the learned judge below, that an assignment absolute in form may be shown as between the parties to have been intended merely as collateral security; and, if notice that it was so intended can be brought home to one who deals with the assignee, he will be bound by the equities of the assignor. But no such notice is shown here, nor are facts disclosed sufficient to charge the company with notice that the assignments were not what they purport to be, i. e., absolute assignments of all assured’s interest under the policies. The mere fact that the assignment was to a bank was not of itself sufficient to put the company upon inquiry as to equities of the assignor; and the company is not to be charged with notice from the mere fact that out of abundance of caution it made inquiry of the bank as to the nature of the assignment. There was nothing in the letter of the bank in response to the inquiry to put it on notice. That the assignments were absolute in form and on their face were sufficient to transfer to the bank all rights under the policies, does not admit of question.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 F.2d 199, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 2836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-life-ins-v-brown-ca4-1938.